Friday Night Comedy from BBC Radio 4 - The Now Show - 13th March 2020 - ft Chris McCausland, Sara Barron and Huge Davies...
Episode Date: March 13, 2020Steve Punt and Hugh Dennis present the week via topical stand-up and sketchesJoin The Now Show team with their unique take on the week's events. Chris McCausland visits A Quiet Place, Sara Barron is i...n splendid isolation and Huge Davies washes his hands of it all...Additional voices by Gemma ArrowsmithWritten by the cast, with additional material from Catherine Brinkworth, Jon Hunter, Aidan Fitzmaurice and Simon AlcockProducer: Adnan AhmedA BBC Studios Production
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Hello, Russell Cain here and we're back.
Evil Genius, our hit podcast where we take icons from history
and reveal surprising things about them.
We taught people that Margaret Thatcher was quite good.
She was a green pioneer,
and that Mother Teresa, not so good.
A little bit cold, in fact.
If you want to have your moral parameters kicked about,
catch the new series of Evil Genius.
Go to BBC Sounds and hit subscribe,
but not in an aggressive way,
otherwise once you're deceased, you'll become a subject
and I will rip you to pieces.
Thank you for downloading the Friday Night Comedy podcast from the BBC.
This week, it's The Now Show.
Hello, I'm Steve Puntz.
And I'm Hugh Dennis.
With us are Chris McCausland, Sarah Barron, Hugh Davis and Gemma Arrowsmith.
And this is...
The Now Show!
Woo!
Thank you.
So, this week, the government stepped up the fight against COVID-19.
The strategy moved from contain to delay.
Next, it might go from delay to lockdown.
If that fails, the final option is to put Priti Patel
in charge of the response and hope the virus quits.
Meanwhile, the antivirus budget was announced
by the new and weirdly enthusiastic Chancellor, Rishi Sunak.
The budget was a full-on borrow and spend fest,
including a massive £27 billion for roads.
Which tells us how confident they are that HS2 will ever be finished.
The tampon tax was finally abolished.
Which will save women money at the chemist
that they can then put towards building up a fund
to buy a bottle of hand sanitiser.
Duties on spirits, beer, cider and wine were all frozen.
Which is clearly to help people who work in the financial sector.
It's going to be fine.
It's going to be fine.
Six pints in a kebab may come up as well as goes out.
Now, the papers, of course, immediately dubbed it Black Monday.
Which is just plain wrong,
because markets which are in the black are actually doing fine.
No trader goes...
Oh, my God! Oh, my God!
The screens are a sea of...
Black.
Finance, of course, is full of the most anxiety-prone people in the world.
They come on one day going...
This is what analysts call
an exponential reverse yield price negativity curve.
It's very common at this stage of the cycle and nothing to worry about.
Then the next day...
The screens are a sea of red that are metaphorically black!
As always, there were pictures of brokers and traders
sitting with their heads in their hands, which is bad.
Leave your hands where they are.
Doing that is against medical advice
and is likely to make the crisis worse.
There's two basic options for the Bank of England.
They could print more paper money.
Or they could create a more valuable commodity
by leaving the paper blank, putting little perforations through it,
double-quilting it and wrapping it round a cardboard sheet.
Because, um...
Because everything's ramping up. This week,
I saw the headline, who declared COVID-19 a pandemic? And I thought, shaft. Damn right.
In case you're confused, here's our medical correspondent. Well, there are four levels.
Outbreak, which is confined to a small area,
epidemic, which is spreading across a large area, pandemic, which is simultaneous spreading across
many areas, and academic, which is what might have happened if governments had paid attention
when it was just an outbreak. Now it's worldwide. Even Tom Hanks has got coronavirus and he's in
self-isolation. I've heard he's really good in it.
and is in self-isolation.
I've heard he's really good in it.
Macaulay Culkin, as far as we know, hasn't got it and isn't at home in self-isolation.
But he is thinking, I wonder if there might be a remake in this.
Talking of Home Alone 2, one of its cast, a Mr D Trump,
has banned travel from EU countries
and wants Congress to sign the Stable Door Shutting Act of 2020.
Given his general level of medical knowledge,
it could be that he thinks germs come from Germany or...
LAUGHTER
..or possibly Mexico, since he announced this week that...
We need the wall more than ever.
More than ever, we need the wall.
Yes, because infectious diseases from China
always arrive over the southern border.
It was all he could do not to add,
Who will pay for the wall?
The virus will pay for the wall.
Now, the ban exempts the UK and Ireland,
which just happen to be the two countries
where Trump has golf course resorts that might lose business.
For everyone else, shares collapsed.
But on the plus side, all the various suspended visas
and travel restrictions do mean, however,
that airports are now so empty
that they are among the safest places on earth.
This summer, we're staying safe.
We're going to spend two weeks in departures in Luton.
It's got everything we need, a bookshop, a restaurant
and seating areas all over the
building so I can isolate myself from my family or holiday. And companies everywhere are spotting
the opportunities of having large numbers of customers wanting to stay indoors. Yes, it's
lockdown month on Sky. Stay where you are for box set binge bonanza. We've got wall-to-wall,
Game of Thrones, Fortitude and Boardwalk Empire.
Or to show you the kind of thing that can happen
if you go out, there's Chernobyl.
It's all got very serious and conspiracy theories
about the virus are popping up everywhere.
This is just a liberal plot to bring down the president.
I've heard it's just a ploy to increase profits
for Big Pharma and Big Toilet Roll.
What it is, is highly infectious,
and we're now seeing an effect on large gatherings and sports events.
The Premier League has suspended all matches until 3rd April.
That's a three-and-a-half-week gap until any further action,
about the same time as the average VAR decision.
And Cheltenham Festival went ahead this week,
but then again,
horse racing is about gambling,
so maybe that's the perfect setting.
Odds on contracting an infectious
virus are on your phone screen
now, and therefore all
over your hands. Please gamble
responsibly, and remember, when the
coughing starts, stop.
All in all, it's difficult at the moment to know
whether to be hopeful or despairing.
It all depends on whether you see the supermarket shelves
as half full or half empty.
Thank you very much.
So soon to be touring with his new show,
Speaky Blinder, is Chris McCausland.
APPLAUSE
Last week, it was announced that the new Bond film
was having its release delayed until November
because of the coronavirus.
Probably partly because Universal were worried
that no-one would turn up to watch it,
but also probably because they realised
that it was a really bad time to be going around the place,
promoting the fact that it was no time to die.
Another Hollywood casualty has been the film
A Quiet Place Part 2.
I'm blind, but although I'm blind, I still watch films.
I still call it watching a film, reading a book,
going out to see me mates, because it just gets clunky, doesn't it?
To be pedantically accurate about it all the time.
And me wife will be like, where do you think you're going?
Well, I'm just going out to listen to me mates.
Sounds rubbish, doesn't it?
I do go to the cinema, though,
because I do think that fruit pastels taste so much better
when you pay £4.50 for them.
There's certain types of films I get
on with better than others. You know,
I don't really get on with the new brand
of CGI, action-packed
superhero blockbusters.
I can kind of follow bits
and pieces along the way, but
mainly they just tend to be over
two hours of nothing but explosions
and wallops and bangs
set to classical music.
I might as well stay at home and put the knives and forks in the microwave.
Stick a little bit of radio 3L in the background.
But the thing about the film A Quiet Place is it just sounded so interesting.
It's a film about evil killer aliens.
Evil killer aliens that are blind. These evil
killer aliens use sound to navigate their surroundings and identify their prey before
attacking them in a frenzied, gruesome bloodbath. How brilliant's that? These evil killer aliens
aren't letting their disability hold them back from getting out there into the world,
even though it's not even their world. The problem with the film A Quiet Place, though,
is that it was really quiet.
Because these evil killer aliens
attack anything that makes a sound,
the entire film was just everybody
trying not to make any noise for 90 minutes,
which I'm sure you've already figured out
makes it damn difficult to follow
if you're only listening to it.
It was 40 minutes before anybody even spoke.
40 minutes before anybody uttered a single word.
And even then they just said things like, shh, don't say anything.
I won't say anything.
Be quiet.
We don't want these blind aliens and, as an unfortunate consequence,
anybody blind that is watching to know what we're doing.
They spent most of the film doing sign language to each other.
Now, although this film was mainly silent,
I wasn't left completely in the dark
because what all of the cinema releases have these days is audio description
and I am sure
you all know how that sounds.
A man stands talking
into a microphone.
He's middle-aged, with a receding
hairline.
I'm 42, by the way, and it's
not receding, it's just thin.
But you've all
probably at some point pressed that wrong
button on your remote control. He m pressed that wrong button on your remote control.
He mimes pressing a button on a remote control.
And being stuck with that annoying voice.
He opens and closes his hand like a talking mouth.
Telling you every single thing that's happening.
He scratches his face.
On the programme that you're watching.
He scratches his arse.
He looks annoyed that I told you that.
But here's something that might surprise you.
I find it annoying as well,
because the truth is, it tells you way too much.
Someone will go,
See you later, bye.
He closes the door.
I'm not stupid, I know what a door sounds like. I don't need you
telling me every single thing that happens in the programme. Hello, my name's Steve. He enters the
room wearing a green t-shirt. Exactly how key to the plot is the colour of this t-shirt. Audio
description isn't new though. I first encountered it in the late 90s. It was an extra audio track on DVDs that you could select
so that if you were blind, you could get a DVD,
you could sit down and you could watch a film on your own.
Brilliant. What a fantastic idea.
The only trouble was, though,
you needed to be able to see the menus to turn it on.
You had to find settings and then audio channel
and then scroll down to whatever audio description might be in the list.
I was stuck in French half the time.
Bonjour, je m'appelle Steve.
What colour is his T-shirt?
But over the years, audio description has shown massive improvements.
And as much as it does tell you too much information,
and as much as I do joke about it,
it is invaluable in allowing people who are blind
to enjoy a whole range of TV shows and films.
However, in the film A Quiet Place, it was pretty much the whole film.
If you were only listening, there was nothing else apart from the audio description.
I mean, I'm not saying the film shouldn't exist.
Of course it should.
I'm just saying that if the audio description
ends up being 95% of all spoken dialogue in the film,
surely it's perfectly acceptable to think,
do you know what?
Maybe this film just isn't for blind people.
Maybe we shouldn't bother audio describing this one.
Maybe we should just put a warning on it
and let them know not to bother coming.
Oi, this one's not for you. Stay at home.
Because I'm perfectly happy
with not everything having to be for me.
I don't need to be included in everything.
I would have rather saved myself the two hours
rather than just being sat there bored
listening to some bloke describing people doing sign language.
It was like being invited out for a lovely sandwich,
but then only getting the slightest whiff of it
before somebody eats it next to you
and just talks you through each bite.
So when A Quiet Place Part 2
finally does hit the cinemas with audio description,
I will definitely not be going.
Instead, I'm going to stay at home,
throw some knives and forks in the microwave.
It's probably not going to be better than going to watch the film, but there's probably
not a lot in it. It's certainly going to be a lot
less effort on my part, and the fruit
pastels will definitely be cheaper.
Cheers.
So the Duke and
Duchess of Sussex carried out their
last public engagement this week.
Their final engagement was at a ceremony held to honour the Commonwealth
by snubbing the only two royals who choose to live there.
The various royals in attendance had adopted clever alternative greetings
to avoid shaking hands at the service.
Charles was offering namaste gestures.
Harry was bumping elbows.
And Andrew opted for a face-down massage.
Harry was bumping elbows.
And Andrew opted for a face-down massage.
The Harry and Meghan saga is, I think, very traditionally British.
Somewhere in our national psyche is an archetype of a long-haired, foreign, arty woman
who gets hold of a popular but emotionally fragile British chap
and proceeds to fill his head with hippie nonsense
until they both end up leaving the country.
Harry and Meghan are the John and Yoko of the 21st century.
Yes, just as foreigner Yoko is compared to Lennon's British first wife,
the press have measured foreigner Meghan against English rose Kate Middleton.
For a long time, they seemed to be playing a private game
to see if there was anything they couldn't find,
an anti-Meghan angle in somewhere.
Yes, now, first, they did this with obvious things, like pregnancy.
Here's the Daily Mail in March 2017.
Not long to go.
Pregnant Kate tenderly cradles her baby bump
while wrapping up her royal duties.
Here's the Mail in January 2019.
Why can't Meghan Markle keep her hands off her bump?
Is it pride, vanity, acting, or a new-age bonding technique?
What happened to the tender cradling, eh?
We don't know, but over at the Daily Express
they were already looking for a bigger target,
something like avocados.
Kate's morning sickness cure?
Prince William gifted with an avocado for pregnant Duchess.
They said in 2017.
Two years on, though, different story.
Meghan Markle's beloved avocado
linked to human rights abuse and drought.
Now, you may think that's a bit over the top, but it's not.
It's this bit that's over the top.
The pregnant Duchess of Sussex is wolfing down a fruit
linked to water shortages, illegal deforestation
and all-round general environmental devastation.
Go home, Daily Express, you're drunk.
Or you're Piers Morgan. I'm not sure which of the two it is.
In both cases, a sort of pathological mania was developing
where Meghan could do literally nothing right.
When Kate and William set up private companies, it was...
To protect their brand, just like the Beckhams.
When Harry and Meghan did it, it was...
A right royal cash-in.
Even something as harmless as the flower arrangements
for a wedding can be a trigger for Markle phobia.
Kate, the commoner-turned-duchess,
painstakingly selected blooms with real meaning,
hence the use of lilac in her bouquet,
which signifies the first emotions of love,
the lily of the valley, meaning a return of happiness,
and the ivy, which represents fidelity.
Ah, the express getting all poetic about Kate and William's wedding in 2011.
By the time of Harry and Meghan's wedding, however,
the bride's bouquet and the matching flower garlands for the bridesmaids
had a different real meaning.
Express.co.uk can now reveal the children's crowns
were made of flowers that can be deadly, especially for children.
What? Was it the ivy,
which represents fidelity? Surely
not the lily of the valley, meaning a return
to happiness. Lily of the valley is a highly
poisonous woodland flowering plant
and Meghan's bridesmaids were so young
that having this flower on their heads
could be considered a dangerous decision.
Now, given that this was the Express,
I'm amazed they didn't follow this up the next day with...
Did Lilia the Valley kill Princess Diana?
You might think the anti-Meghan propaganda
couldn't get any more ridiculous, but you'd be wrong,
because you'd have forgotten about The Sun,
who in May 2018 ran this headline.
Meghan Markle is related to Jack the Ripper serial killer suspect.
And people wonder why Harry doesn't like the press.
The thing is, it hasn't stopped.
Everybody's got it in for them, even two Russian YouTube pranksters
who phoned Harry up and got through to him on his landline in Canada
by pretending to be Greta Thunberg.
Yes, and Harry fell for it. Now, he really should have guessed.
If only because no 17-year-old is going to be calling on a landline.
But the media are now speculating
on how the pair will make money in the future.
But they're hardly the first royals to run a commercial enterprise.
Prince Charles has his duchy range of organic food,
while the Queen has a whole range of banknotes and stamps
with her face on them.
Whatever they do, though, the palace has banned them
from using their domain name, Sussex Royal,
which is a shame because already it sounds like an insurance company.
Are you concerned about involuntary redundancy
and worried about paying the bills?
At Sussex Royal, we understand your problems.
Has an unexpected turn of events meant eviction from your property?
And are you seeking alternative accommodation?
Believe me, at Sussex Royal, we know exactly what that is like too.
Are you in your 90s with a recent accident meaning you can't get car insurance?
Here at Sussex Royal, we think
it's probably for the best, Grandad.
Now, leave us
alone, or we'll send you a free bunch
of Lily of the Valley.
Now, a pandemic means
a worldwide crisis, and here to
give us an American view on the global disaster
of the moment,
the biggest thing to come out of Chicago since tiny, tiny pizzas, it's Sarah Barron.
Hello, everyone. Despite my commitment to life here in the UK, I like to keep abreast of news from the old country. And I don't know if you guys are going to be able to relate
to this, but back in the States, the country's being run by this barely coherent blonde guy.
And this tragically is who we have to rely on to deal with coronavirus.
And it's tough for Trump because he genuinely cannot understand it's not always a good thing to go viral.
His main concern is the economy, and that's not because he cares. That's because in a recession,
he doesn't get re-elected. If there was evidence that coronavirus boosted the stock market,
he'd make people French kiss hello. Instead of declaring an emergency, he's reassuring the American public.
Trump said that the tests for U.S. citizens are almost as perfect as the transcript of the phone call that got him impeached.
So what he's actually saying is that these tests aren't perfect.
They're actually really bad, but not bad enough that he won't still be president.
He's basically saying, great news, guys.
No matter how many people die, I won't lose my job.
He was being shown a government lab and said to assembled scientists and journalists,
I like this stuff.
I have a natural ability.
Maybe I should have done that instead of running for president,
which is a bold claim from a man who, up until now,
has only seen people dressed as scientists in porn films.
If Trump gets coronavirus and winds up having to self-isolate,
someone please, for the love of God, take his phone away from him so he can't tweet.
We take away his phone and he winds up yelling insults through a keyhole at an intern.
I feel great. I got the best immune system, huge immune system. My system's
probably too immune. Pass it on. Personally, I don't think self-isolation, at least if it's just
as precaution, sounds that bad. And that's because I have this weird thing where I hate everyone.
I didn't used to be this miserable, okay? 2010, for example, I was a ray of American sunshine.
But I've lived here now for eight years, and over the course of those years,
you people have exfoliated the positivity right off me.
I'm miserable now, too, okay? Thanks.
And self-isolation, as a result, sounds amazing.
Self-isolation means I can avoid all my friends, who I hate.
Do you guys have friends who you hate?
It's a phenomenon of middle age.
Young people never understand it.
Like a young person hears this phrase, my friend, who I hate.
And they're like, wait, what?
Wait, a friend who you hate? And they're like, wait, what? Wait, a friend who you, who you hate? I don't get
it. Whereas people hovering around 40 and above, we hear it. We're like, uh-huh. Because we've
lived, right? So we know that when you're like 16, 17, you're getting out in the world,
you're still making your friends. You're like, besties are for evsies.
My friends are my chosen family.
I'm like, they're not.
My problem is that you only have to isolate for two weeks.
And for me, that's not enough.
Two weeks is not enough of a break for my friend Susan's chewing.
Susan is my friend, who I hate.
But I said it on the radio the other problem with self-isolation is that I still have to be in my house with my family and families are the worst don't you think
they're even worse than your friends so I have um this husband all right who is British.
The lack of whooping when I say the word British,
that is the self-loathing I signed on for.
I love you people.
I have this British husband and a British son,
and I can't self-isolate from them.
And oh my God, I want to.
Because a husband, in my experience, is basically just like a crappy intern. Here's my impression. What should I do? Where is everything? Am I getting paid?
Terrible. And obviously, I don't mean that my husband is terrible. And obviously, I don't mean that my husband is terrible. And obviously,
I don't mean that my child is terrible. My husband and child are fine. The terrible thing
is the idea of having to isolate with them for two weeks. My kid is three years old and self
isolating with a three-year-old? No way. Self isolating from a three-year-old? Yes, please.
Because then I could sit on my own eating unhealthy takeaway
and insulting celebrities on the internet. Behaviors that, luckily for me, are now considered
presidential. In a way, now that I think about it, Donald Trump is better positioned than even I am
to cope with this. In a way, Donald Trump is better positioned than everyone to cope with this.
I mean, his hands are so small, he'd only need to sing one verse a happy birthday.
Thanks very much, guys. I've been Sarah Barron.
Now, will you please put your hands together using official WHO-approved techniques
for comedian Huge Davis.
APPLAUSE
So people have been singing Happy Birthday twice
whilst washing their hands,
which can be devastating if you don't have any friends.
So I've made an alternative song
that you can sing whilst you're washing your hands.
Here's a 20 second song to sing as you wash your hands.
You first wet them in the tap, yeah,
on the front and on the back.
You gotta rub that soap deep in your hands
before you touch your pots and pans
You've been on a public tram
So remember to wash your hands
Here's a 20-second song to sing
As you panic, bye for your family
Think 28 weeks later
As you bulk by toilet paper
Oh, tins and tomato spaghetti shampoo
You gotta stay home for a year or two
You punched a man for a can of soup
And remember to put your tissues in a bin
Here's a 20 hour song to sing
Whilst you're hiding in your safe room
Yeah, 40 inch walls under the floor
Yeah, you've sealed the doors just to be sure
Your best friend whispers
Please let me in!
But you don't really know where he's been
You never really liked him anyway
And remember to avoid touching your face, yeah
It's a 20-day song to sing
Three years into the apocalypse
Life has become a timeless nightmare
Release me from this bottomless pit
You're nearly out of food and coal
Not sure why you bought so much toilet roll
You've lost everything you've ever loved
But please remember to sneeze
Into your elbow
Thank you very much.
Now, the EU, they're forcing manufacturers to make mobile phones easier to repair
in order that we don't have to change them so often.
So we've asked our audience here what they have around their house
that has lasted and that they've never thrown away.
My grandfather's gas mask.
Just as well, really.
What have you never thrown away?
Our mother.
Although I don't think she can be repaired any more.
And this is my favourite one.
What have you and your family never thrown away?
Hereditary hair loss.
Thank you for listening and goodbye.
Goodbye.
Thank you for listening and goodbye.
Goodbye.
You've been listening to The Now Show,
starring Steve Funk, Hugh Dennis, Chris McCausland,
Sarah Barron, Hugh Davis and Gemma Arrowsmith.
It was written by the cast with additional material from Simon Alcock, Catherine Brinkworth,
John Hunter and Adrian Fitzmaurice.
The producer was Adnan Ahmed
and it was a BBC Studios production.
Hello, it's me, Greg Jenner,
the bloke from the funny history podcast,
You're Dead to Me.
I've got good news.
We're back for a second series
where historians, comedians alike
will join me
in learning things about
well, Mary Shelley,
the ancient Greek Olympics
and their history of chocolate.
Find us on the BBC Sounds app
or wherever you get your podcasts
and you'll be able to hear
comedians ask historians
questions like this one.
This is Tim Minchin
asking about Neanderthals.
Do they have penises like us?
Search for You're Dead to Me
on the BBC Sounds app.